“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>In its most recent

edition,

“font-size: 9pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Belles Lettres,

published by the Center for the Humanities at Washington

University, published a long essay about boxing great Joe Frazier

by center director Gerald Early. The American is

reprinting that essay in the 2012 Black History Month section, in

three parts,w ith permission.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”> 

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>It is well that war is so

terrible, or we should grow too fond of it.

“right”>

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>—Robert E. Lee

(1862)

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>1. Boxing as

War

“font-family: Verdana; font-size: 9pt;”> 

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Norman Mailer, in his

1971 Life magazine article on “The Fight of the Century”

(the championship boxing match between the then undefeated, Olympic

gold medalist Muhammad Ali and the then undefeated, Olympic gold

medalist Joe Frazier), called him the War Machine. He was short,

with stumpy, muscular arms, a stocky body, thick legs – all the

signs of someone who had been a fat kid who at first had been

bullied and then became a tough guy himself.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>As Frazier wrote in his

autobiography, “Fact is by the time I was ten, eleven years old,

adults in Laurel Bay [South Carolina] would steer their kids clear

of me.” There was nothing of the ideal heavyweight about him. But

his dream, from watching Friday Night Fights as a boy (his

family was the first in Laurel Bay to own a television), was to be

another Joe Louis: “Boxing fit with the rough-and-tumble character

I was.”

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>His nemesis, Ali, had the

Greek-god proportions, the proper dimensions of the modern

heavyweight of the 1960s and 1970s, the looks of the boy next door

all combined with the patina of political relevance and the fervent

innocence of the true believer. Joe Frazier was actually small for

the division, a truck built more to be a football running back than

a heavyweight.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>But he was fierce,

relentless, always bobbing and weaving, his head in constant

motion, pressing forward, looking for an opening with his deadly,

stomach-smashing, liver-paralyzing left hook. (I cringed the first

time I saw Frazier hit somebody during the 1964 Olympics. The blow

was both so immaculately merciless and bone-breakingly hard. “I

wore a son of a bitch out with that hook,” Frazier said. I was

twelve and felt utter fear when I saw it. When Ali hit someone, I

was dazzled, not fearful.)

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Frazier sometimes left

his feet to throw a punch. Shorter fighters occasionally do that.

Mike Tyson did, during his halcyon days. If Ali made you think, for

at least a certain portion of his career, that boxing was some form

of ballet or modern dance, or a form of comic theater threaded with

moments of melodrama, Frazier told you simply that boxing was war.

Nothing more. Nothing less.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Frazier was honest in

that way; you either learned to grow fond of the sport’s brutality

and savage objectives, its terrific terribleness, or you walked

away from it, horrified or outraged or bored or all three combined.

I never quite learned to grow too fond of it, never learned to love

the war in the ring, but I learned to respect it

immensely.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>I never liked Joe Frazier

as I encountered him during my adolescence or young manhood, but I

learned to respect him a great deal, even more so his

scorched-earth brand of masculinity. Frazier reassured me in my

doubt, rescued me from my own immature instincts, prevented me from

growing too fond of war.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>To be continued next

week.

“font-size: 9.0pt; font-family: Verdana;”>Gerald Early is Merle

Kling Professor of Modern Letters and director of the Center for

the Humanities at Washington University in St.

Louis.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *